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damn name wrote:Blaming anyone today doesn't fix anything at the plant today. And they're not even close to containing this yet.
damn name wrote:Blaming anyone today doesn't fix anything at the plant today. And they're not even close to containing this yet.
omae mona wrote:And they are basically calling laughable the idea that there is even remote cause for immediate concern in the Tokyo metropolitan area.
omae mona wrote:But I still don't get it. Why all the focus on the engineering aspects of this? I know this is a hobby for many people here, but isn't the issue we actually care about our health?
Yokohammer wrote:I think we have to remember that, broadly, there are two types of health we need to worry about physical and psychological. Not knowing what's going on at the plant, and especially not having any idea of how long it's going to take to fix, can be a real psychological burden for some people.
Looking at the engineering issues gives us an inkling of how long: weeks, months, years? If we're looking at some radioactive leakage for a few weeks, for example, I think most of us can agree that it probably won't be a problem and can then get on with our lives. But if the plant is going to be spewing radioactive crud all over the place
for many months or a year, say, then ... then what? I really don't know,
but I do know that if that was known to be the case I'd be digging around for reliable information on the long-term effects of low-level radiation.
cstaylor wrote:Here you go: $25 billion for the moment.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12889641
That's a pretty big drop in the bucket!
omae mona wrote:First of all, that is the number TEPCO's mulling over for issuing debt. And it will come from private sources (banks are currently jumping at the opportunity to finance TEPCO from what I have heard). While partially related, the $25 billion is not a measure the amount of economic damage the plant's problems are causing.
omae mona wrote:But even if you pretend this is $25 billion of damage to the economy, yes, I still think it's a drop in the bucket compared to the $250 billion.
Kyodo News wrote:Radioactive iodine 3,355 times legal limit found in seawater
Radioactive iodine-131 at a concentration of 3,355 times the maximum allowable level under the law was detected in a seawater sample taken Tuesday afternoon near the crisis-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, the government's nuclear agency said Wednesday.
The highest concentration observed so far in seawater from the troubled power station suggests radiation originating from reactor cores, where fuel rods have partially melted, may have been continuously leaking into the Pacific Ocean.
cstaylor wrote::glow2:The highest concentration observed so far in seawater from the troubled power station suggests radiation originating from reactor cores, where fuel rods have partially melted, may have been continuously leaking into the Pacific Ocean.
Reuters wrote:Japan's government may require nuclear plant operators to have additional emergency power in place to cool reactors and spent nuclear fuel pools in case existing systems are knocked out, a ministry official said on Wednesday.
TEPCO sock-puppet from his lair in Kansai wrote:Ah, omae mona, what is this reason and logic you use? If you're not spouting the same sheeple-panic-inducing crap produced by the 24 hour news networks then you must be wrong!
cstaylor wrote:FGL always takes contrarian positions
cstaylor wrote:so there's no hope of changing his mind, even with evidence showing TEPCO's criminal negligence. If and when it ever sees the light of day, I suspect he'll be very quiet about his previously incorrect position.
cstaylor wrote:I still think nuclear power is the best way to power Japan
cstaylor wrote:but the management at TEPCO and the GOJ needs to go.
FG Lurker wrote:And who, exactly, would replace them? That is the bigger question. The whole situation with amakudari needs to be fixed.
Sheeple Panic Muppet wrote::glow2:
cstaylor wrote:Minshuto may push through legislation to force careless power utilities like TEPCO to have hardened backup power supplies:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/30/us-japan-nuclear-idUSTRE72T09E20110330
FG Lurker wrote:Stop panicking already.
cstaylor wrote:How about everyone below the level of bucho moves up, and those above are fired?
cstaylor wrote:Look, there's amakudari and then there's unsafe amakudari like we're seeing here. A bank manager whose branch gets downsized gets moved off to some corporate customer? Harmless. Mid-career regulators who desperately need the retirement perks from the virtual power monopoly in eastern Japan? No thanks.
cstaylor wrote:Additionally, Japan doesn't separate their promotion and regulation of nuclear power like the U.S. does.
FG Lurker wrote:It's a culture issue. Removing the top layer to replace it with people who have been heavily influenced by the top layer won't fix things.
FG Lurker wrote:I wouldn't really consider the first example to be amakudari.
FG Lurker wrote:The second one definitely would be and it needs to be stopped. I'm at a loss for how to stop it though. (Passing a law, but the law needs to stand up to court challenges on constitutional grounds...)
cstaylor wrote:I'm not panicking.
cstaylor wrote:However, I don't remember the last time I ate seafood from Las Vegas.
cstaylor wrote:And I like how your measurement yardstick keeps getting worse. We've gone from TMI to Chernobyl to above-ground nuclear testing.
cstaylor wrote:"Fukushima: not nearly as bad as the Trinity testing grounds"
FG Lurker wrote:Trinity was in New Mexico, not Nevada.
FG Lurker wrote:I don't eat seafood at all. Problem solved.
I think my original tagline sounds better than: "Fukushima: What explodes in Vegas stays in Vegas... probably"FG Lurker wrote:This sentence perfectly represents most of your posts on this subject: Long on fear, missing any facts. Trinity was in New Mexico, not Nevada.
Greji wrote:That's not all together true Lurk. There was a Trinity that worked at Mustang Ranch the last time I was there. She was a bit pricey, but well worth the ride....
FG Lurker wrote:Over a period of about 20 years (give or take a bit) the US conducted over 100 atmospheric (above ground) nuclear tests ~150km from Las Vegas and ~400km from Los Angeles. Even the smallest of these tests released *far* more radiation than is possible to release from the Fukushima plants. Even in this situation there have not been measurable increases in cancers in the LV or LA areas that I am aware of. Stop panicking already.
This report is a review of the draft feasibility study that was issued at the request of Congress by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Over 500 atmospheric nuclear-weapons tests were conducted at various sites around the world during 1945-1980. As public awareness and concern mounted over the possible health hazards associated with exposure to the fallout from weapons testing, a feasibility study was initiated by CDC and NCI to assess the extent of the hazard. The CDC-NCI study claims that the fallout might have led to approximately 11,000 excess deaths, most caused by thyroid cancer linked to exposure to iodine-131. The committee noted that CDC and NCI used the best available data to estimate exposure and health hazards. The committee does not recommend an expanded study of exposure to radionuclides other than 131I since radiation doses from those radionuclides were much lower than those from 131I. It also recommended that CDC urge Congress to prohibit the destruction of all remaining records relevant to fallout.
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